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Regis Philbin
Mar 6th, 2008, 07:20 PM
http://www.townhall.com/Columnists/WilliamRusher/2008/03/06/global_warming_doubters_strike_back

Global Warming Doubters Strike Back

By William Rusher
Thursday, March 6, 2008

Every few years, some group of scientists, egged on by the media, is persuaded to warn mankind of some new danger facing the human race. This triggers the anxiety that always floats just below the conscious level in most people, and serves the purposes of the media by generating several months of gratifying headlines. It also serves the purposes of the scientists, by giving them months of flattering publicity, not to mention the financial rewards that accompany scientific papers on the subject.

The excitement dies down in due course, but there is always some new peril being discovered. Remember the ozone hole? And whatever happened to acid rain?

A new study found that natural causes as well as global warming are to blame for recent dramatic Arctic warming.

But by far the most durable scare in recent years has been that generated by the supposed dangers of global warming. The Earth's climate is never absolutely stable. It is always either warming or cooling by tiny fractions of a degree per year, and recently it has been warming. By extrapolating this process beyond any justification, the usual scaremongers have managed to convince a good many otherwise sensible people that human activity is responsible for the warming, and that we must slam on the brakes or face disaster.

A November editorial in The New York Times spelled it out: "... the consequences could be disastrous: further melting at the poles, sea levels rising high enough to submerge island nations, the elimination of one-quarter or more of the world's species, widespread famine in places like Africa, more violent hurricanes." What's more, there is no time to waste: "...the world must stabilize the emission of greenhouse gases by 2015, begin to reduce them shortly thereafter and largely free itself of carbon-emitting technologies by midcentury."

tiger_rascal
Mar 6th, 2008, 09:25 PM
An interesting fact for you Regis. I live in a rural part of the country, the pollution levels are very small. Every summer I grow morning glories, its a flowering vine that only blooms in the morning. I noticed once in awhile after it rained that my purple morning glories had pink dots on them from the rain. Come to find out, acid rain is to blame. You can try the experiment for yourself. If you live in a large heavily polluted city I would be interested in you growing some morning glories this year and taking some pictures of the effects that acid rain can have on plants. I would like to see.

Now, Im not saying a little acid in the rain that leaves some spots on some flowers is anything to get overly dramatic about, its not going to kill us. But, its still there, and Im not sure if it could get worse and what that means for humans and animals.